REGION Saturday, September 4, 2021 BMCC reviews FARM II after state cuts funding College faculty see more potential in creating space for drone program By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — Once on the precipice of construction, Blue Mountain Community College’s FARM II project still is at the drawing board. The basics of FARM II remain the same: an indoor rodeo arena with space for BMCC classes west of the Round-Up Grounds. The Pendleton Round-Up Asso- ciation would lease its land west of Southwest 18th Street to provide land for the proj- ect. The city of Pendleton, which also owns land in the area, would make a deal with the Round-Up to relinquish its interest in the area. What’s changed is FARM II’s funding outlook. While the state once committed to covering the entirety of the facility’s $13 million price tag, the most recent legislative session saw lawmakers slash the state’s allocation from bonds from $6.5 million to $3 million. At an Aug. 20 meeting of the BMCC Board of Education, interim President Connie Green explained how the project lost more than half of its funding. “Even though we got it last time and no one complained, this time they did,” she told the board. “Some complained that we were not fi nancially viable: ‘Why would you give a college not fi nancially viable money to do this?’ So instead of getting the $6.5 (million) match, we got $3 (million).” Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File A sign on Dec. 4, 2020, along Southwest 18th Street in Pend- leton advertises the future site of Blue Mountain Communi- ty College’s Facility for Agricultural Resource Management. Connie Green, BMCC interim president, said in August 2021 the agricultural department has suggested the college use FARM II for its unmanned aerial systems program rather than the veterinary program, which has not grown much in recent years. With the support of Gov. Kate Brown, the Oregon Legislature approved the full funding of FARM II in 2019 through a combination of funds from bonds and the Oregon Lottery. Blue Moun- tain planned to get started on construction following the 2020 Round-Up, but encoun- tered its fi rst delay when the college learned that it would not get bond funding until 2021. But the college didn’t make it to 2021 before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, tanking Oregon Lottery funds as restaurants and bars closed and canceling all of the 2019 projects the Legis- lature approved. Over the past few sessions, a group of local leaders banded together to lobby the Legislature for regional projects like FARM II and the Umatilla County Jail renovation. Pendleton Mayor John Turner, a former Blue Mountain Community College president, said the group believes the state still has federal stimulus dollars available to cover the short- fall. The group has a lobby- ist in Salem who will try to convince legislators to fully fund FARM II at a future session. In the meantime, the college is starting to recon- sider what services FARM II will off er once its completed. In an interview after the meeting, Green said the college initially wanted to feature veterinary studies classes in addition to off er- ing a permanent home to the college’s rodeo team. But Green said the veteri- nary program hasn’t grown much in recent years, and now college faculty think the space might be better suited for a different academic purpose. Green said the agricultural department has suggested Blue Mountain use FARM II for its unmanned aerial systems program, where students could work with drones in an enclosed, controlled environment. BMCC has endured tumult over the past two years. With student enroll- ment continuing to fall and the Oregon Department of Correction restructuring its contracts with community colleges, Blue Mountain has cut more than 42 positions since 2019. With new BMCC President Mark Browning set to start on Sept. 7, the college is attempting to restore its enrollment while facing competition for students from Walla Walla Commu- nity College, Columbia Basin College in Pasco and Baker Technical Institute. Through- out all this, Blue Mountain still is trying to secure fund- ing for a new facility that will require its own maintenance and upkeep budget. Green said agreements with the city of Pendleton and the Round-Up won’t be fi nalized until FARM II is closer to fruition, but in nego- tiations with the city, munic- ipal offi cials agreed to take over event promotion and management duties for the college when its not in use by BMCC. Green said that could off er a source of revenue for the facility that could off set its maintenance costs. Green added the set-up would bene- fi t the city because it could market FARM II, the Pend- leton Convention Center and the Vert Auditorium as a package of venues for poten- tial events. Pendleton City Manager Robb Corbett confi rmed the details of the negotiations but added the two sides had not spoken about the issue in several months. Hermiston parks boss retires; city attorney is next By ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian HERMISTON — Latin music and happy chatter fi lled Hermiston’s Harken- rider Senior Center on Wednesday, Sept. 1, as folks gave a joyful send off to Larry Fetter, Hermiston’s long-serving parks and recre- ation director. Fetter retired at the end of the week. People often ask him if his life in the parks and recre- ation department resembles the zany, antic-fueled TV show, “Parks and Recre- ation.” “There’s some interesting analogies,” he said. From day to day, you never know what will come in through the door, he said. During his tenure, people came to him with new ideas. When someone asks for a dodgeball league, for exam- ple, he is nonplussed. Sure, he thinks. Why not? During his time with parks and recreation, he has seen trends come and go. Right now, family physical fi tness activities are popu- lar. He has helped organize obstacle courses, a recent children’s triathlon and the Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian/Hermiston Herald Hermiston Parks and Recreation Director Larry Fetter talks with guests Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2021, during a retirement party in his honor at the Harkenrider Senior Center in Hermiston. bathtub races at the city’s Melon Fest. “Things like that make this job very interesting,” he said. When he started his career in 1984, he began a parks and recreation program in Colville, Washington. Youth soccer and basketball were big. A 100-mile-long ride around the area also was popular. There were brew-making events. Here in Hermiston, tradi- tional events, Festival Street activities, tree lightings and fi rework shows have become mainstays. People expect them, and his department Tobias Unruh, owner 600 David Eccles Rd Baker City, Oregon hosts them frequently. One event can draw 5,000 to 6,000 people. Fetter has served as Herm- iston’s parks and rec director for 10 years. He said he was proud to have been the direc- tor during the third iteration of the Funland Playground at the foot of the Hermis- ton Butte. Fetter said he has heard from people visiting from out of town who will stay for up to three days just for the playground. He also said the city will need to manage it well. Funland Playground reopened July 4 following a community eff ort to rebuild the site after a fi re burned it down in 2019. A fi re in 2001 burned down the original playground, which the city built in 1996. He called the destruction of the previous playground “heart-wrenching.” If the completion of the new play- ground was a highlight of his tenure, the ruin of the old one was a low. Ruled as arson, the fi re pained Fetter and many people in the community. In anticipation of his retirement, he and his depart- ment created a park’s plan update, which the city coun- cil adopted. This sets the development plan for parks in Hermiston for the next 10 years. A wellness center with an indoor aquatic center is one of the showcase items in this plan. It also includes a trail expansion, making a 10-mile loop. Hermiston City Manager Byron Smith said Fetter accomplished much in this role and credited him with making “a great vision for the park’s department, for recre- ation programs.” The city is hiring to replace Fetter and in the meantime appointed recre- ation manager Brandon Artz as the parks interim director. East Oregonian A3 LOCAL BRIEFING Two Milton- Freewater homes damaged in fi re MILTON-FREEWA- TER — A Milton-Free- water home was destroyed, another damaged and two people were injured in a fi re this week, authorities said. According to informa- tion sent Thursday, Sept. 2, by Milton-Freewater Fire Chief Shane Garner, the blaze began at 4:51 p.m. Aug. 31, in a carport at a home at 920 N.E. Fourth Ave., Milton-Freewater. The Milton-Freewa- ter Fire Department and Milton-Freewater Rural Fire Department & EMS responded to the scene. Garner said the home where the fi re started was considered a total loss. The fl ames also reached another home at 1006 N.E. Fourth Ave., causing minor damage. Two people suffered minor injuries during the fi re and were treated by paramedics at the scene, Garner said. They were transported to a local hospital for further treat- ment. No injuries to fi refi ght- ers were reported. The cause of the fire is under investigation, Garner said. TRCI reports fi rst COVID-19 death in months UMATILLA — Two Rivers Correctional Insti- tution in Umatilla on Thursday, Sept. 2, reported its fi rst COVID-19 death in months, according to a press release from the Oregon Department of Corrections. In January, the prison repor ted at least 15 COVID-19 deaths in an outbreak that saw more than 600 adults in custody fall ill. The outbreak remains the largest among Oregon prisons since the pandemic started in March 2020. With 788 total cases, more AICs have tested positive for COVID-19 at TRCI than at any other prison in Oregon. However, in March, the prison completed off ering COVID-19 vaccines to all its AICs. In all, more than 73% of the prison’s AICs were immunized at that time. Since then, the prison has reported just 21 cases, according to state data. Twelve of those cases have been reported this month. The prison’s latest COVID-19 victim is a man between 65-75 years old who died in the pris- on’s infirmary Aug. 31. The state did not disclose whether he had underlying health conditions. The prison has four active COVID-19 cases. Police arrest teens at high school following fi ght HERMISTON — Herm- iston police on Tuesday, Aug. 31, arrested two teens at Hermiston High School after reports of a fi ght the week before, and found one was packing a gun. Police Chief Jason Edmiston in a post on the department’s Facebook page reported offi cers on Aug. 26 at about 4 p.m. responded to the 200 block of Northwest 11th Street after receiving a report of several males in a phys- ical fight. Suspects fled before police arrived, but officers spoke with two potential victims and were able to identify all persons involved. That led police to contact a 16-year-old male and a 17-year-old male this week at Hermiston High School and take the pair into custody, according to Edmiston, and because they “had been very crim- inally active over the last year.” Offi cers took the teens to the Hermiston Police Department and found the 16-year-old was conceal- ing a small-caliber fire- arm. Police arrested both for third-degree assault, and the 16-year-old on the additional charge of unlaw- ful possession of a fi rearm. Police took both to Pend- leton to be lodged with Umatilla County’s juvenile department. Edmiston stressed the police department tries its best to refrain from interrupting the school day, but in this case the circumstances and increas- ing criminal behavior of those involved prompted the department “to move forward at the end of the school day and take the individuals into custody.” Police continue to pursue a third individual. 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